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Curtis Hidden Page

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Name
  
Curtis Page

Role
  
Writer


Died
  
1946

Education
  
Harvard University

Books
  
Japanese Poetry: An Historical Essay with Two Hundred and Thirty Translations

People also search for
  
Moliere, Konstanty Ildefons Galczynski, Virginia Scott

Curtis Hidden Page (April 4, 1870-December 13, 1946) was a United States educator and writer.

Biography

He was born in Greenwood, Missouri. He graduated from Harvard University, where in 1890 he became the first recipient of the George B. Sohier Prize for literature. He held teaching positions in French and English at Harvard University (1893–1908), Columbia University (1908–1909), Northwestern University (professor of English literature, 1909–1911), and Dartmouth College (professor of English literature, 1911–1946).

Page was elected to the New Hampshire state legislature in 1933 and again in 1939.

Compiler of anthologies of verse such as British Poets of the Nineteenth Century and The Chief American Poets, Page also published verses, essays, and stories in numerous periodicals. In 1906, writing of his activities to his fellow Harvard alumni, he stated: "I have two volumes of verse nearly ready, but find little time to give to completing them and doubt if they will be published until after I am dead!"

Page also translated many French works, including A Voyage to the Moon, by Cyrano de Bergerac and The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife by Anatole France. He published a well-regarded translation of eight plays by Molière in 1908; of these, Tartuffe, or the Hypocrite is available online from Project Gutenberg.

References

Curtis Hidden Page Wikipedia


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